by Marion Bryce
“Who do you think did do it, Lady Ruth?” Gimblet asked.
“What do I know? An escaped lunatic, one of the keepers, the under housemaid, anyone you like. What does it matter? It wasn’t David, even though his namesake did kill Goliath, and I always disliked the name, having suffered from a Biblical one myself. I said to his mother when he was born. ‘For goodness’ sake give the poor child a name he won’t be expected to live up to. Just fancy how his friends will hate to be known as Jonathans, let alone thingamy’s wife. You’re laying up a scandal for your son,’ I told her, and if my words haven’t come true it’s more thanks to him than to his parents. A nice pink and white baby he was, poor boy. There’s just one good side to this dreadful affair,” she went on without a pause, “and that is that the young lady with the dollars whom he was to have married, and hated the sight of, has thrown him over. The first least little breath of suspicion was enough for her, and the moment he was downright accused she was off. And he’s well rid of her, dollars and all An Englishman of his birth and looks doesn’t need to go to Chicago for a wife.”
“Was Sir David in need of money?” asked Gimblet.
“He hasn’t got a penny,” said Lady Ruth. “Not a red cent, as that terrible young woman put it. His father left everything to the moneylenders, so to speak, and David couldn’t bear to see his mother poverty-stricken. He did it entirely for her sake—got engaged, I mean—but I don’t think he’d have been such a self-sacrificing son if he’d met Miss Juliet Byrne a little earlier in the day.”
“Indeed!” said Gimblet. “I thought Miss Byrne seemed very much worried about his arrest.”
“Worried? Poor child, she’s the ghost of what she was a few days ago. Half-drowned, too, when it happened, which made it worse for her.”
“She must have had a narrow escape,” Gimblet remarked. “What was the name of the man who pulled her out of the river?”
“Andy Campbell. He had been stalking with Mark McConachan.”
“Was young Lord Ashiel with him?”
“No, he was on ahead. He saw Juliet in the distance, just going up to the waterfall, but he seems to have taken her for Miss Romaninov, which is odd, because they aren’t in the least like one another, one being tall and the other short, in the first place, and one fair and the other dark in the second. He can’t have looked very carefully. However, he was very positive about it till they both assured him that Julia Romaninov had turned and gone home some time before she had reached the top pool. And I certainly should have in her place. It doesn’t amuse me scrambling over rocks and scratching my legs in bramble bushes. The path Andy came by goes along high above the water for half a mile. I hate walking on a height myself. And for most of that distance the river is not in sight. If he hadn’t been thirsty and come down to the waterside for a drink at a spring near by, he would never have seen Miss Byrne floating down the stream, and she would have been in the loch pretty soon. It just shows how much better it is to drink water than whisky.”
“It was lucky he did,” said Gimblet. “Does the path pass in sight of the pool she fell into?”
“No. The banks are high there, and you can’t see down into the pool unless you go to the very edge of the precipice. I did it once, to look at the waterfall, and I very nearly joined it. It’s a nasty giddy place, though why one should feel inclined to throw oneself down I can’t imagine; but it seems a natural instinct, and it’s certainly easier to go down than up.”
“It appears almost miraculous that she wasn’t drowned,” said Gimblet. “She certainly can have been in no fit state to bear the events that followed.”
“No, indeed. She has lost everything: father, family and lover at one blow. You know Lord Ashiel said she was his daughter, and told her he’d made a will leaving everything to her. For that matter the lawyers say he didn’t—not that I should ever believe anything a lawyer said. They always mean something you wouldn’t expect from their words. They do it, I believe, to keep in practice for trials, you know, where they have to make the witnesses say what they don’t mean, poor things. And what I shall have put into my mouth by them, if I’m called as a witness against poor David, doesn’t bear thinking of. But the Lord knows what Ashiel did with the will, and, as I was saying, it can’t be found.”
“So I heard,” said Gimblet “You talk of being called as a witness, Lady Ruth. Do you know anything about the case? Where were you when the shot was fired?”
“Oh no,” she said, “I shouldn’t have anything to tell, but I don’t suppose that will matter. They’ll twist and turn my words till I find myself saying I saw him do it with my own eyes. My poor dear husband, when I first met him, was an eminent Q.C., as you may know, Mr. Gimblet, so I have a very good idea what they’re like. I refused him point-blank when he proposed, but he proved to me in three minutes that I’d really accepted him; and it was the same thing ever after. A wonderfully brilliant man, though slightly trying at times, especially in church, where he always snored so unnecessarily loud—or so it seemed to me. I often think deafness has its compensations, though I’m sure I ought to be thankful at my age that my hearing is still so acute. However, I didn’t hear the shot the other night, but the castle walls are thick even in that detestable modern addition, and besides, Julia Romaninov has got such a tremendously powerful voice.”
“Were you talking to her?”
“Oh dear no! I was playing patience, and she was singing, while Miss Tarver murdered the accompaniment. We little thought at the time that some one else was murdering poor Ashiel while we were sitting there in peace. I must say that girl sings remarkably well, and it was a pity there was no one who could play for her. Though it wasn’t for want of practice on Miss Tarver’s part. The moment we were out of the dining-room she would sit down at the piano, and they would neither of them stop till bedtime.”
“Had they both been playing and singing all that evening?”
“Yes, they hadn’t ceased for a moment, and I found it prevented the Demon from coming out, as I couldn’t help counting in time with the music. It was all right when it was one, two, three, but common time muddled it dreadfully, though now I come to think of it, Julia was not actually in the room when we heard the bad news. She’d gone upstairs to look for a song or something. Of course there’s no legal proof that Juliet really is his child,” Lady Ruth continued; “she admits that he was rather vague about it, fancied a resemblance, in fact. Not that I or anyone else had any notion he had been married as a young man, but that’s a thing he would be likely to be right about. I must say Mark has behaved extremely well about it, even quixotically. He wanted her to take his inheritance, and when she refused—and of course she couldn’t decently do otherwise— I’m blessed if he didn’t ask her to marry him.”
Gimblet looked up with more interest than he had yet shown.
“Do you mean to say he proposed that, merely as a way out of the difficulty?”
“Well, more or less. I don’t say he isn’t attracted by the pretty face of her, as much as his cousin was; privately I think he is, but I don’t really know. Anyhow, it certainly would be a very good solution; but it was tactless of him to suggest it with David at the foot of the gallows, poor boy.”
“She didn’t tell me that,” murmured Gimblet.
At that moment Juliet came into the room, and they talked of other things.
“I hear the post is gone,” Gimblet said presently.
“I particularly wanted to catch it. I suppose there is no means of posting a letter now?”
The last train had gone south by that time, however, so there was nothing to be done till the next day.
He retired again to his room and gave himself up to his correspondence.
First a long letter to Macross in Glasgow, begging for the loan of prints of the photographs taken by the police during their visit, together with any details they might see fit to impart as to their observations and conclusions. “I have arrived so late on the scene that you have left me nothing to
do,” he wrote deceitfully. “But for the interest of the case I should like to have a look at the photographs.”
He did not expect to get much help from Macross.
Then he took from his pocket the pill-box in which he had stored the dust so carefully collected in the gunroom. He wrapped it carefully in paper, and addressed the small parcel to an expert analyst in Edinburgh. He wrote one more letter, and then went downstairs again.
The dressing-bell sounded as he opened his door, and at the foot of the staircase he met the two ladies on their way to dress.
“Dinner is at eight, Mr. Gimblet,” Lady Ruth told him.
“I was just coming to find you,” Gimblet answered her. “I want to ask if you would mind my not coming down? I am subject to very bad headaches after a long journey; and, as I want particularly to be up early tomorrow, I think the best thing I can do is to go straight to bed and sleep it off. It is poor sort of behaviour for a detective, I am aware, but I hope you will forgive it.”
“You must certainly go to bed if you feel inclined to,” said Lady Ruth; “but you will have some dinner in your room, will you not? They shall bring you up the menu.”
“No, really, thanks, I shall be better without anything. I know how to treat these heads of mine by now, I assure you, and I won’t have anything to eat till tomorrow morning. The only thing I need is quiet and sleep. If you will be so very kind as to give orders that I shall not be disturbed.… ”
“Of course, of course,” said his hostess, full of concern. “And you must let me give you an excellent remedy for headaches. It was given me years ago by dear old Sir Ronald Tompkins, that famous specialist, you know, who always ordered every one to roll on the floor after meals, and I invariably keep a bottle by me.”
And she hurried off to fetch it.
Gimblet accepted it gratefully, and as he passed a hand across his aching brow said he felt sure it would do him good.
Once again within his own room, however, the detective’s headache seemed to have miraculously vanished, and he showed himself in no hurry to go to bed. Instead, having locked the door and drawn down the blind, he sat down in an arm-chair and gave himself up to reflection. Mentally he rehearsed the facts of the case as far as they were known to him, and was obliged to admit that he found several of them very puzzling.
There were other problems, too, not directly connected with the murder, of which he could not at present make head or tail. For instance, where was he to find the documents which he knew it was Lord Ashiel’s wish he should take charge of. He had promised that he would do so, and the recollection of his failure to guard the first thing the dead peer had entrusted him with made him the more determined that he would carry out the remainder of his promise. But how was he to begin his search? He had so little to go on, and he dared not hint to anyone what he wished to find. Yet, if he delayed, it was possible that young Ashiel would come across the papers in his hunt for his uncle’s will, and Gimblet felt there was danger in their falling into the hands of anyone but himself.
He took out his notebook and studied the dying words of his unfortunate client.
“Gimblet—the clock—eleven—steps.” Or was it steppes?
Considering that he had lived in dread of a blow which should descend on him out of Russia, the last seemed the more likely.
There was the strange circumstance of the body’s being found by the police in a position differing from that described by those who first saw it. Young Ashiel, Juliet and the butler all agreed that it had fallen forward on to the blotting-book in the middle of the table; but Mark had told him that on his return with the police the attitude had been changed. Had he been mistaken? Macross’s photographs would show. But if not, and the murdered man had really shifted his position, what did it prove? That they had been wrong in thinking him dead? The doctor’s evidence was that the wound he had received must have been instantly fatal, or almost instantly. Then some one must have moved the body, and who but David knew where the key of the room had been put away? But why should David have moved him?
Then there was the letter which had come two days after the murder; the letter written in French and posted in Paris, but probably not written by a Frenchman, and so timed as to reach its destination too late. Was it intentionally delayed, or would Lord Ashiel’s death come as an entire surprise to the writer? It certainly would, if the police were right, and Sir David Southern guilty of his uncle’s death.
But was he guilty? Gimblet thought not.
These and other questions occupied the detective’s mind so completely that half an hour passed like a flash, and it was only when the noise of the dinner-bell broke in upon his meditations that he roused himself and pulled out his watch. Then he sat upright, and listened.
His room was above the drawingroom, and he could hear Lady Ruth’s clear, rather high voice mingling with the deep tones of a man’s, in a confused, murmuring duet which after a few moments died away and was followed by the distant sound of a closing door.
It was not difficult to deduce from these sounds that Lord Ashiel had arrived, and that the little party of three had gone in to dinner.
It was half an hour more before Gimblet rose, and walked quietly over to the window. He drew the blind cautiously aside and looked out. Already the days were growing shorter, and the little house, embowered in trees, and shut in by a tall hill from the western sky, was nearly completely engulfed in darkness. Below him, on the right, he could just discern the top of the porch, and beyond it a faint glow of light rose from the window of the dining-room.
It did not need a very remarkable degree of activity to clamber from the window to the porch, and so down to the ground. To Gimblet it was as easy as going downstairs. In two minutes he was stealing away under the trees in the direction of Inverashiel Castle.
“The worst of this Highland air,” he said to himself as he walked along, “is that it makes one so fearfully hungry, even here on the West Coast. I could have done very nicely with my dinner. But such is life. And it’s lucky I am not entirely without provisions.”
So saying, he took a box of chocolates from his pocket and began to demolish the contents.
CHAPTER XIII
By the time he reached the castle, the night was dark indeed. He approached it by the path along the burn, and felt his way cautiously up the steep zigzags of the hill, and past the servants’ quarters, where a dog barked and gave him an uneasy minute till he found that it was tied up, and that the noise which issued from a brilliantly lighted window—which he guessed to be the servants’ hall—did not cease or diminish on account of it.
There were no other lights to be seen, and he edged his way round to the front of the house, which loomed very black and mysterious against the liquid darkness of the moonless sky. A little wind had risen, and the sound of a million leaves rustling gently on the trees of the woods around was added to the distant murmur of the burn, so that the night seemed full of noises, and every bush alive and watching.
Keeping on the grass, and with every precaution of silence, Gimblet crept along till he thought he was outside the drawingroom.
It did not take him long to find the window he had left unlatched that afternoon, but it was an anxious moment till he made sure that no one had noticed it and that it was yet unfastened. If a careful housemaid had discovered it and shut it, he would have to begin housebreaking in earnest. Luckily it opened easily at his touch, and he lost no time in climbing in, though it was rather a tight squeeze through the narrow imitation Gothic mullions, and he was thankful there were no bars as in the library.
He had more than once during his career found himself obliged to enter other people’s houses in this unceremonious, not to say burglarious fashion. But it was always an exciting experience; and his heart beat a trifle faster than usual as he stood motionless by the window, straining his ears for the sound of any movement on the part of the household. Nothing stirred, however, and by the help of an occasional gleam from his pocket electri
c torch Gimblet made his way to the door, and through the deserted house to the distant passage leading to the old tower. Once inside the library he breathed more freely, and when, after holding his breath for some minutes, he had made certain that the absolute silence of the place continued unbroken by any suspicion of noise, he felt safer still. His first act was to draw the curtains, and to fasten them together in the middle with a large safety-pin he had brought for the purpose. Then, secure from observation, he switched on his torch, placed it on the table with its back to the window, and set about what he had come to do.
As he had not failed to observe, earlier in the day, the book-lined walls of the library were broken, opposite the window, by a panelled alcove where a small table stood, beyond which, against the wall, was a very large and tall grandfather’s clock of black and gold lacquer, in imitation of the Chinese designs so popular in the eighteenth century.
Among Lord Ashiel’s last words, “The clock” had been uttered immediately after the detective’s own name. No doubt they formed part of a message he wished to convey; and, though they might refer to any clock in or out of the house, it seemed to Gimblet worth while to begin his investigations with the one nearest at hand, and he turned his attention to it without loss of time.
Gimblet was a connoisseur of the antique, and a few minutes’ examination proved to him that this was a genuine old clock, untouched by the restorer’s hand, and in an excellent state of preservation. The works appeared all right as far as he could make out, but through the narrow half-moon of glass, so often inserted in the cases of old clocks for the purpose of displaying the pendulum, that article was not to be seen, and he found that it was missing from inside the case, as were also the weights, so that it was impossible to set it going. There was one odd thing about it, which the detective had already remarked: it was firmly fixed to the wall by large screws, and he thought that there must be some opening through the back into a receptacle contrived in the panelling behind it. The case was so large that he was able to get inside it, and examine inch by inch the wood of the interior, which was lacquered a plain black.